76
votes

I'd really like to automate unicoin mining so that it can go on in the background while I'm doing important things like answering questions on stackoverflow. I notice that there is a canvas#uc-rockcanvas element where you can click the rocks. Clicking down seems to add the class md, and then releasing the click removes md.

Is there any way to interact with specific elements of the canvas using JavaScript so that you can trigger clicks on them?

6
  • Maybe you could rig up a script that would let you target the clicks manually, and then the script would blast the rock.
    – Pointy
    Apr 1, 2014 at 14:45
  • I tried this, but the canvas only responded to the organic clicks
    – JoshWillik
    Apr 1, 2014 at 14:58
  • 3
    @JoshWillik: Probably a trust problem. Alas, my customizable deluxe rock blasting machine gun will live on in the unirealm.
    – Zeta
    Apr 1, 2014 at 15:41
  • 1
    I just bought Voting Animation and I will test it on your question. edit omg what was that. estuckouvrflaw pls y u do dis
    – Parziphal
    Apr 1, 2014 at 21:44
  • Open up the JavaScript console and type in addUnicoins(999) and see what happens...
    – Jojodmo
    Apr 2, 2014 at 2:37

7 Answers 7

91
votes

You absolutely have wrong preferences. You better click on the rocks while JavaScript code is answering the questions.

3
  • Why not both? Answering and clicking in Javascript Apr 1, 2014 at 16:28
  • 27
    Unfortunately it's not possible, JS is single-threaded
    – Dr.Molle
    Apr 1, 2014 at 18:15
  • 2
    @Dr.Molle: If mining can be done with just AJAX calls, you can spawn a long-running web worker to handle that and do the answering in the main/DOM thread.
    – ssube
    Apr 1, 2014 at 19:44
49
votes

Here a code I've got on META SE :

(function uniMine() {
  $.getJSON('/unicoin/rock', function(data) {
       setTimeout(function() {
          $.post('/unicoin/mine?rock=' + data.rock, 
            {fkey: StackExchange.options.user.fkey});
       }, 10000);
   });
  setTimeout(uniMine, 11000);
 })();

Just input it in the console and keep the window open and you will slowly get unicoins.

Not sure about the original author, I think it is Doorknob

5
  • 2
    When you run this script too long, your earnings will dwindle to a consistent 0 per request
    – JoshWillik
    Apr 1, 2014 at 15:57
  • @JoshWillik weird, i have it till this morning and im still getting some.... But it is really slow! Apr 1, 2014 at 15:59
  • 1
    That may be only for me though. I got locked out of SO several times because of my own auto-miner development :P
    – JoshWillik
    Apr 1, 2014 at 16:00
  • 3
    Don't adjust the timeout values to lower. According to the feedback messages there's a 10 second rate limit anyway. Also, if you run this while you are on the field where you get the rocks, you'll get errors sometimes (conflicts) form the server. Run it simply at the main SO page instead.
    – Csaba Toth
    Apr 1, 2014 at 17:33
  • 77
    Put it in the console? I think you mean COINSOLE! AMIRITE? AMIRITE? Apr 1, 2014 at 18:38
27
votes
(function uniMine()
 {
     $.getJSON('/unicoin/potato', function(data)
               {
                   setTimeout(function()
                              {
                                  $.post('/unicoin/mine?potato=' + data.potato, {fkey: StackExchange.options.user.fkey});
                              }, 10000);
               });
     setTimeout(uniMine, 11000);
 })();

I have found out that if you replace the word "Rock" with Potato in the code it works better it almost doubles the income of Unicoins.

1
  • 15
    I knew there was no way this could be true. But I was soooo hoping it was
    – JoshWillik
    Apr 1, 2014 at 16:06
11
votes

Paste this code in your JavaScript console..

The problem is solved for life1!

coinMeMaybe(9999);

If that doesn't work, try this:

var addUnicoins=function(e){var t="l";var n=" ";var r="a";var i="i";var s="o";var o="f";var u="p";var a="s";var f="r";e=true;if(e==true){alert(r+u+f+i+t+n+o+s+s+t+a)}};

And then be sure to call the function addUnicoins(999);. You can use any number you'd like.

1
  • 12
    There appears to be an off-by-one error in your addUnicoins function. When I call addUnicoins(999) I only get 998 unicoins
    – nvuono
    Apr 1, 2014 at 16:26
4
votes

This has nothing to do with canvas clicking, but it does sort of solve your automation problem:

http://pastebin.com/6uR2cwpQ

This script will succeed around 30% of the time. You'll have to go digging through your requests to find your fkey though.

Full code below

setInterval( function(){
    console.log( "firing" );
    $.ajax({
        url: "http://stackoverflow.com/unicoin/rock",
        dataType: 'json',
        data: {
            _: new Date().getTime()
        },
        success: function( o ){
            console.info( "Got rock " + o.rock );
            if( Math.random() < 0.4 ){
                console.info( "Ignoring this one" );
                return;
            }
            setTimeout( function(){
                console.log( "Attempting rock send" );
                $.ajax({
                    url: "http://stackoverflow.com/unicoin/mine",
                    dataType: 'json',
                    type: 'post',
                    data: {
                        rock: o.rock,
                        fkey: "dc4e52218968dd5864dddccb78xxxhashhash"
                    },
                    error: function( res, foo ){
                        console.error( foo );
                    },
                    success: function( e ){
                        if( e.value === 0 ){
                            console.warn( "No luck" );
                        } else {
                            console.log( e.result + ", you earned " + e.value + ' coins' );
                        }
                    }
                });
            }, 3000 + (Math.random() * 1700) );
        }
    })
}, 6000 );

console.log( "starting up!" );
1
vote

Enjoy. Run the script in the console of your browser's developer tool and move the mouse cursor on the rock...

var elem = $('#uc-rockcanvas');
var x, y;

elem.mousemove(function (e) {
    x = e.pageX, y = e.pageY;
});

var trigger = function () {
    elem.trigger(jQuery.Event("mousedown", {
        pageX: x,
        pageY: y
    }));
}
setInterval(trigger, 10);
0
votes

You want the click events to be user-initiated (for security, obviously). You'll need to simulate the clicks at the OS level. On Windows (also security), I like AutoIt for this task.

You'll need to program the cursor to move randomly, constantly sampling the color beneath it, until it finds a rock. Then submitting many sequential clicks becomes trivial:

// from http://www.autoitscript.com/autoit3/docs/functions/MouseClick.htm
// MouseClick ( "button" [, x, y [, clicks = 1 [, speed = 10]]] )
MouseClick ("left", x, y, 50, 10)

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